A Raisin in The Sun: Teaching Unit
A Raisin in The Sun: Teaching Unit
Teaching Unit
by Lorraine Hansberry
Copyright 1990 by Prestwick House Inc., P.O. Box 658, Clayton, DE 19938. 1-800-932-4593.
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ISBN 978-1-60389-899-7
Item No. 200708
TEACHING UNIT
3.
prove or disprove the following thesis by referring to comments or incidents in the play:
This is a story about the pursuit of the American Dream. Even though Walters dream was valid,
he pursued it poorly.
4.
rite a short character analysis of the major characters in the play: Walter, Mama, and
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Beneatha.
5. recognize how conflict is an essential element in the play, and identify and discuss the
conflict in these relationships:
6. recognize the emotional power of this play by identifying a forceful scene, stating who is involved
in it, what the conflict is, and what, specifically, makes it an emotionally gripping scene.
7. discuss what elements of this play give it a universal appeal that makes it as meaningful
and relevant today as when it was written in the late 1950s.
8. identify and cite examples of different types of literary devices used by the author, and explain
their significance.
9.
escribe how figurative language presents images in a readers mind similar to what is
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experienced by an audience in a theater.
10. M
ake decisions about personal values through careful observation of the actions of the
characters.
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OBJECTIVES
TEACHING UNIT
Which character is the protagonist of the play? What makes this character the protagonist?
2. A Raisin in the Sun is about racial intolerance in Chicago in the late 1950s. Are the issues
that are addressed in the play still relevant today? Why or why not?
3.
How can Walter be considered a victim of society and a victim of his own shortcomings?
4. Central to a drama is conflict. Identify and discuss the various conflicts in the play and how
they are resolved.
5. To engage people in a drama, the characters and plot must be believable, and the reader must
care about the characters. Discuss how Walter, Mama, and Beneatha can be seen as representing
real people experiencing actual life situations. Explain what makes the characters interesting.
6.
hy does the author go to such lengths to describe the Younger familys furnishings in their
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apartment? What do these furnishings and the state they are in say about the family?
7.
hat does the absence of light in the Younger familys apartment symbolize? Why does
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Ruth desperately hope for sunlight in the new house? How does this idea relate to the title
of the play?
8.
escribe the relationship between Ruth and Walter at the beginning of the play. How does
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it change during the course of the play?
9.
ompare and contrast Asagai and Murchison. Which boyfriend does Beneatha choose and
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why?
10. W
hat does Hansberry mean by the term assimilationist Negro? Which character is called
by this name? Why?
11. W
hen an adult does something wrong, is it acceptable to blame society or ones parents
for the behavior? Why?
12. W
hy is Mamas little plant so important to her? What does it symbolize? When is it seen
for the last time?
13. I n the opening scene of Act II, by what means does the author take the reader into the Younger
apartment and present a play within a play?
14. C
onsidering the year this play was written, how can Beneatha and Asagais discussion in
Act III be qualified as being prophetic?
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STUDENT COPY
STUDY GUIDE
STUDENT COPY
What does the authors use of Langston Hughess poem Harlem [2] to open the play
suggest that the play will be about?
2.
Where and when does the play take place? What clues tell us this?
3.
The opening stage directions state that the furnishings of the Younger living room are tired.
What literary device is being used? What details does the author use to back up the claim?
STUDY GUIDE
STUDENT COPY
23. Summarize the negative situations that threaten the Younger family. What positive aspects
may help them resolve their problems?
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STUDY GUIDE
STUDENT COPY
1.
What is Ruth singing at the beginning of this scene? What earlier scene does this recall?
2.
What does Ruth say she and Walter did the previous night?
3.
How has the atmosphere in the Younger apartment changed since the first scene?
4.
5.
How do Beneatha, Ruth, and Walter react to Mr. Lindners appearance at the door?
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STUDY GUIDE